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MDC joined with the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and St. Louis County Parks last month on an experimental harvest method to rid Creve Coeur Park Lake of invasive Asian carp.

MDC

MDC and partners remove 47,000 Asian carp from Creve Coeur Lake

The lake, once packed full of these non-native interlopers, is now largely free of them thanks to an experimental removal project conducted last month by the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC), the U.S. Geological Survey, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and St. Louis County Parks.

Invasive Asian carp, primarily bighead carp and silver carp, entered Creve Coeur Park Lake by way of Missouri River flooding prior to 2009. They quickly began to compete with native species for food and space, reducing numbers of natives and severely curtailing sport fish like crappie. Asian carp also caused conflicts by leaping at and striking lake users, and have been the source of several nuisance fish kills.

Conventional attempts to eliminate the invasive fish had failed in the past. It turns out that the solution came from the same origin as the problem.

“We tried a new experimental method from Asia, called the Unified Method, to push all the Asian carp to one end of the lake where we able to harvest almost 50,000 of them,” reported MDC Fisheries Management Biologist Kevin Meneau. Meneau coordinated MDC’s involvement in the effort.

The Unified Method was adapted from techniques previously tried and proven in Asia. It’s a process of systematically driving and herding fish with boats utilizing electrical and acoustic stimulation. The technique was still experimental, but biologists had high hopes it would work.

“One of the things that get Asian carp really fired up is the sound of outboard motors. We were able to isolate that sound and broadcast it underwater,” Meneau said. “We could project that sound and the Asian carp would leave that area, then we could quickly block off those areas they left with giant nets.”

The multi-partner team spent an intense three weeks clearing and blocking the lake, cell-by-cell, as they gradually herded the fish to a final collection point. Along the way, they had to overcome challenges including cold wind and weather, ice sheets forming on the lake, and frozen nets. Meneau explained that winter was the best time to perform the operation because the fish are less active and easier to contain.

Since native fish tend not to respond to the acoustic stimuli in the same way, the process proved successful in being highly selective to moving only the target fish.

“We excluded Asian carp from about 95% of the lake, and pushed them to an area where we could set up for harvest at the north part of the lake near Sailboat Cove,” Meneau explained.

Once confined to that limited area, biologists were able to use seining nets to remove the fish from the water. Altogether, biologists took out around 47,000, or about 119 tons, of the unwanted invasive fish from the lake. Population estimates indicate that approximately 85% of the Asian carp population was eradicated.

Now that the majority of the invasive Asian carp are gone, there is no possibility that those remaining fish could eventually reclaim the lake. This is because Asian carp require flowing water, such as that found in the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, for their eggs to be viable. Those conditions do not exist in Creve Coeur Lake.

“I think our harvest efforts showed that. We caught no young fish, they were all adults,” confirmed Meneau.

So the future looks good for Creve Coeur Lake. Biologists say that the dramatically lower density of Asian carp will greatly reduce interactions with lake users like rowers and paddlers. At their current level, the Asian carp will no longer compete with native fish as severely as before, which should enable the crappie to come back on their own in the next couple years.

Meneau stresses that the rigorous project, which pushed on non-stop for the entire three weeks, was a true team effort.

“All the partners pulled together resources and expertise from all over the Midwest to achieve this goal,” said Meneau.

Asian carp are a pervasive problem for many waters in the U.S. Perhaps even more important than the recovery of Creve Coeur Lake is the hope these new techniques will offer to other lakes throughout the Missouri and Mississippi River basins.

“The Unified Method was experimental, only components were used in other parts of the country. We brought it all together for this project and it was successful,” Meneau said. “We’re going to spread the word to other conservation entities throughout the country that maybe this will work for them."

As the Asian carp were pushed from sections of the lake, biologists deployed giant block nets to exclude them from the cleared areas. Section-by-section, the fish were eventually driven from 95% of Creve Coeur Lake during a three week period.